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Opportunity Knocks? Top 3 Worst Performing Blue Chips for March 2026

Stock price down

Sometimes, the stock market hands investors a puzzle.

All three of the Straits Times Index’s worst performers for March 2026 reported strong headline results for their latest full year.

Profits surged, dividends were raised, and order books looked healthy.

Yet their share prices lagged behind the rest of the pack.

The common thread? In each case, the market appeared to be reading beyond the headlines — scrutinising cash flow quality, the sustainability of one-off gains, and lurking structural risks.

Let’s take a closer look.

Yangzijiang Shipbuilding (SGX: BS6), or YZJ, one of China’s largest non-state-owned shipbuilders, delivered an impressive set of FY2025 results.

Revenue climbed 7.4% year on year (YoY) to RMB 28.5 billion while gross profit surged 28% to RMB 9.8 billion, as margins expanded from 29% to 34%.

Profit attributable to equity holders rose 30% year on year to RMB 8.6 billion.

The group rewarded shareholders handsomely, proposing a final dividend of S$0.20 per share – a 67% increase over the S$0.12 paid a year ago.

At a share price of S$3.83, this translates to a trailing yield of around 5.2%.

So why did the share price slide from its all-time high of S$4.62 in early March?

The answer may lie in the cash flow statement.

Free cash flow (FCF) fell sharply to RMB 2.5 billion, a fraction of the RMB 11.9 billion generated a year earlier, weighed down by higher working capital requirements and increased capital expenditure for the Hongyuan Yard and LNG terminal project.

Meanwhile, FY2025 order intake came in at US$2.5 billion – a marked step down from the US$14.6 billion secured in FY2024.

Management has set a US$4.5 billion target for FY2026, but the industry’s demand shift from large containerships towards smaller vessel segments may cap the upside.

The group’s outstanding order book of US$22.4 billion, with deliveries stretching through 2030, provides a solid revenue runway – but the market appears to be pricing in a normalisation of the boom years.

City Developments (SGX: C09), or CDL, reported FY2025 revenue of S$3.6 billion, up 9.7% YoY, while profit attributable to owners tripled to S$629.7 million.

Those are eye-catching numbers.

But dig a little deeper and a sizeable chunk of that profit surge came from capital recycling gains, notably a S$473.1 million gain from divesting its 50.1% stake in the South Beach mixed-use development.

Strip that out, and the underlying earnings picture looks far less dramatic.



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